TechnologyJune 28, 2026·8 min read
Should You Add Battery Storage to a Multifamily Solar Project?
Batteries look great on a pitch deck. Whether they belong on your building depends on three specific things.
The three questions
- Does your utility have time-of-use rates with a wide peak-to-off-peak spread? If peak rates are 2.5×+ off-peak, storage arbitrage works. If your utility is flat-rate, storage is decorative.
- Do you have a demand charge? Rare on residential; common on mixed-use. If yes, storage pays back fast through demand shaving.
- Is resilience part of the value proposition? In hurricane and wildfire markets, backup power is a real leasing feature — often worth $20–$40/mo/unit in rent premium.
Cost delta
Adding storage roughly doubles the per-unit installed cost vs. solar alone. The ITC (30%) applies to storage too, plus another 10% adder in some low-income census tracts.
When it works
- California multifamily with NEM 3.0 (storage recovers most of the export-rate loss).
- Texas properties in ERCOT with wholesale-indexed billing.
- Any hurricane-zone Class A property using resilience as an amenity.
When it doesn't
- Flat-rate utility markets with no demand charges.
- Properties under 20 units — the fixed cost of a battery cabinet doesn't amortize.
Default recommendation: start with solar-only, wire in a storage-ready inverter, add batteries in year 3 if TOU spreads widen.
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